Монография, Boston; London: Artech House, 2017. — 399 p. — ISBN10: 1630812579
This authoritative first volume provides a solid understanding of modern spacecraft classification, failure, and electrical component requirements. This book focuses on the study of modern spacecraft, including their classification, packaging and protection, design versions, launch failure and accident analysis, and the main requirements of electronic components used. Readers find comprehensive coverage of the design and development of individual components as well as systems, their packaging, and how to make them last in space. This is a useful resource for military and civil applications.
Specific topics include:
The manufacturing of electronics for space;
The main physical mechanisms of the impact of destabilizing factors of outer space, including various kinds of radiation, high-energy galactic icons, and particles of cosmic dust;
The design of advanced space-grade microelectronic products such as memory microcircuits, microprocessors, interface and logic of microcircuits and power control microcircuits;
Facts and features about the “space race” that have not been available until now
Review
Highly recommended is Anatoly Belous, Vitali Saladukha and Siarhei Shevdau's Space Microelectronics Volume 1: Modern Spacecraft, Failure, and Electrical Component Requirements (9781630812577, $229.00), a first volume dedicated to exploring modern spacecraft classification and electrical operations. From their design, launch failures, and accident analysis to the types of electronics used in these craft, readers receive an in-depth and well-detailed electrical engineering survey of special importance to any working with electronics systems designed for space. From analysis of launch failure causes to charts and graphs filled with mathematical insights, this is a powerful reference. –Midwest Book Review, September 2017
I strongly believe that the book Space Microelectronics will go straight to the world contemporary literature of technical science. –M.V. Kovalchuk, President of the National Research Center the Kurchatov Institute, Full Member of the American Association for Science Advancement (AAAS), Physics Division and Scientific Adviser of the Faculty for Nano- Bio-, Informational Technologies